Evening Star Newspaper, October 22, 1929, Page 39

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WOMAN'’S PAGE' Veils Find Favor in This Country BY MARY MARSHALL. One by one the fashions of 20 years)she can wear a veil without reproof. ago are coming back into importance, | She may even allow her forchead to and the middie-aged woman who still | show beneath her new hat withoui hav- clings to the fashions of her early|ing some up-to-date member of the| twenties finds herself much happier in raran evebr BLACK VELVET HAT HAS LACE VEIL WHICH FALLS FROM THE BRIM. BLACK NET VEIL WITH GOLD EMBROIDERY AND SMALL BLACK FELT SHAPE. BROWN TULLE VEIL FLARING FROM GOLD LACE TURBAN. making her selections this season than she has been for a good many years. She may wear her sklrlp long and full about the knees withoul being accused of dowdiness, she can define her waist- line and even wear a corset without apologies to her modern daughter. She can wear a separate skirt and a tuck- in blouse and look entirely up-to-date instead of amusingly old fashioned and ruthlessly pull it down on her he must remember, however, that though the old fashions have returned they have returned in altered guise and all the little accessorics so fraught with | associations of her youth must be worn |in the modern manner if they are not ! to_appear old fashioned. | Veils are at last findirg favor in this | country, though not until they have be- | | come well established in Paris, There | are veils for all sorts of hats, but woe betide the older woman who attempts to | wear a veil precisely as she did when worn for the purpose of keeping stray locks in place. The coiffure should be immaculately neat before the hat or veil are adjusted and the veil should | | never be drawn closely over the face. | Sometimes the vell is arranged so that | it flares out on all sides from a closely adjusted hat, sometimes it is simply | draped over the hat without coming | over the face at all and sometimes it is jauntily adjusted with the edge just | above the tip of the nose. Cross-stitch work is easy to do and very smart when used on_children's dresses and sports clothes. This week's Help for the Home Dressmaker gives a number of clever designs of this sort | which you can easily copy. If you would ilke a copy, please send your stamped, self-addressed envelope to | Mary Marshall. care of The Evening | Star, and it will be forwarded to you. ; (Copyright, 1920.) DAILY DIET RECIPE RADISH. Radishes diced, 1 cup. Ripe olives chopped. ; cup. Grated onion, 1 tablespoon. French dressing, '- cup. Lettuce leaves, 8 or 10. SERVES FOUR OR FIVE PORTIONS, Wash radishes well but do not peel unless skins are tough. Dice radishes and mix with the chop- ped olives, grated onion and French dressing. At time of serv- ing place on tender, crisp lettuce leaves on individuai salad plate. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fiber, much lime, iron and vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under- welght and by those wishing to reduce if non-fattening dressing were used. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., October 22 (N.A.N.A)).—Movieland will not take its engagements seriously this year. A ro- mance comes to notice. ‘“Publicity,” sneer those who know, or think they oW, ‘This was their cry when Ina Claire and Jack Gilbert were first seen to- gether at openings. It was still the cry when.their wedding was the big surprise of 1929. They cried “Publicity!” and “I told you so!” when rumor of a dif- ference at Antibes on the honeymoon found its way into the headlines. “Di-| vorced in three months” was the col-| ony’s prephecy. Clara Bow® engagement to Hnnyg Richman is another romance they are| taking with a grain of salt. I am eager | to know why bets are against there ever being a marriage. ‘But you can't tell the boulevard seers that this is a genuine love story. They 1ift one_eyebrow, look knowingly, and say: It got them in the headlines, didn't 1t?” And that is that. Harry Richman has been ill, and the marriage has been postponed. More smiles, more knowing looks, more “I told you so’s.” * Alice White and Sid Bartlett are ru- mored as going the orange-blossom way. The little White announced an engage- ment to an aviator, Grace, about a year ago. There was much newspaper pho- tography, with Alice and the stuntman in loving poses, interviews about mar- riage and love, old-fashioned and mod- erne. Grace had a book coming out in a couple of months, and Alice White knew talkies were on their way—to stay. Well, that was that. Grace went East and Alice remained in cinemaland and made the sort of gelatin strip classed as torrid Fahrenheit. Now Sid Bartlett is at elbow when- ever Alice White is seen in public. It's unannounced officially, though gener-' ally understood, but not accepted by the Straight Talks to W | corner cynics. “Publicity,” say they. They have a strange way of knowing things. The village never took Lita Chaplin's engagement to Roy D'Arcy very seri- ously. When thé engagement was broken the lady gave the somewhat naive excuse that she was doing so well “financially” there was “no need to get married.” Mary Philbin's engagement to Paul Kohner has gone on so long that now it has become legendary. The exquisite little cameo face is being seen less and less in pictures. Paul Kohner, who once was Mary Philbin’s shadow, often appears with other groups publicly. A year in Europe has intervened for him since their engagement was announced. The situation has become casual—and nothing is more deadly in movieland than the casual thing. Bridegrooms-to-be are being feted in the village in a son.ewhat unusual fashion. Their friends invite them to a stag dinner. The bridegroom is called for in a hearse of ancient make, with his friends seated inside, weeping into black-bordered handkerchiefs. A floral plece with a stuffed dove graces the chair of the guest of honor at the fes- tive board. Dunce caps of black paper are worn, only the bridegroom being allowed to sport white. Marriages here run the gamut of three minutes, three days, three months, on. Now and then a couple stay mar- | ried, ‘and all the professional populace loves them and applauds them, to be strictly honest. | Those with the marrying mania get tolerance—sometimes amused tolerance. romance as a means of interesting the world in notable names is getting the cold shoulder. (Copyright, 1929, paper Alliance by North American News- omen About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN, What do you do with checks that ‘come your way? Do you cash or deposit them ‘at once or do you put them in some forgotten place? Perhaps you have tried to cash a «gtale” check and been told by your bank that it is past date. While the difference of a few days will not usu- ally result in that sifuation, & check that is several weeks or months old will not always be honored. Never hold a check over. not cash it at once, indorse it in favor of your account and mail it to your bank to be credited to you. It costs you but two minutes and 2 cents, and you avoid possible loss or embarrass- ent., mBDmQHm!s a check is held over so fong that the drawer of the check thinks it is lost and stops payment on §t. It is even possible that an account will be closed out while one’s check 18 lying in a dresser drawer or unused Pocketbook. nxofie holds a check l;mg enough the bility of losing it increases. PoMany women have discovered that it they had deposited their checks prompt- 1y they would have avoided the bank's charge on accounts that fall below the minimum daily balance. It is too bad to learn that holding out a check cost one a_couple of doll Itiseasy tof Bow. Simply feed them properly. VULTON'S PLANTABES One in each pot, once every week These little tablets are clean, odorless. 1t you can- | beautiful house plants ‘There have been women who have ong that the makers | of cours |a bank is not permitted to honor the | check of a dead depositor, and any one with a check of that sort must file a claim against the estate, and perhaps wait for several months for her money. | " Loss of a check is often tantamount | to loss of money. By the time one has discovered her loss, the check may be cashed by the finder and so be ir- | retrievable. It is improbable that your own signature is known at the maker's bank, and so forgery is simple, ‘Do not deposit a check that is not properly made out. At times unscrupu- lous or careless folks give out checks Iacking signature or full details in order to delay or evade payment. Always have such checks corrected before pre- senting them for collection. One caution more. A checks upon which there is any erasure or_change will be refused at your bank. If there is any change or alteration necessary. be firm in your request for a new check to replace the defective one. READY-COOKED, produce They are highly cone centrated plant food. ‘Thereis but little plant food in amount of earth in plant pots quickly taken up by the plants. additional food is supplied they FULTON'S PLANTABBS help plants | stand the hot, dry atmosphere of living | rooms. the genuine, Order by name, Sent post~ 'S PLANTABI dealer cannot supply. CoRP. Bldg.,Baltimore, M fla and vory lpol:eddnl r - she was 20. The vell should never be | But the old dodge of capitalizing on| SHRE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. October 22, 1860.—The local base ball championship was settled today when | the Potomac Club defeated the Nation- | a1 Club with a score of 33 to 16 runs. | For several reasons the game excited {more interest than any other base ball game ever played here. The question of superiority has long been undecided, {and as this match was intended as a test, its deciding game was a matter of the greatest importance to both clubs. The Potomacs, unwilling to admit that they played better on their own grounds than elsewhere, gave their opponents the choice of the grounds and the Na- | tionals chose their own. The Potomacs were somewhat short- handed. Trook and P. Wise, two of their strongest batters and best fielders, were absent and their loss was much felt, though their substitutes plaved well and efficiently throughout the game Roach, Hartley, Bigger, Robinson and Flaherty were strongest ‘at the bat, each striking some telling balis. Bigger's pitching was even and true, and he | fielded in tiptop style, “fastening in" | every ball that came near him. Hartley managed the sccond base well. stopping and fielding the ball | handsomely to first base. Wood, though unusually unfortunate at the bat, played | gloriously in the right, and Roach on | the ‘third basc played with steadiness { and quickness. | _George Hibbs, Dooley and Beale, of the Nationals, went into the “corking” | line pretty largely, the latter leading | the score of his side. Beale, as short, | and Dooley, in the left, fielded beauti- fully and French on the second played | with his usual certainty. George Hibbs | has a magnetic attraction for balls, for they seem to pass him and then come | back. His fielding was even and sure— though his pitching lacked its usual regularity. Ed Hibbs made his first ap- pearance in a match, and though not up to the mark at the bat. did pretty well on the third. Frank White on the first base played well—so well that Brown's absence was not felt The umpire was Carl Yulee, of the Washington Club. His decisions were clear and impartial, and no dissenting voice was heard in regard to them. The victorious Potomac Club wants to get a game or two with a Baltimore club, but the players of that city have decided to postpone a “final hearing” until the Spring. NANCY PAGE How Long Keep Bitter- sweet and Lanterns? BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Just as surely as the Autumn season rolls around just so surely does the homemaker of today acquire bittersweet and Japanese lantcrns. One wonders what we ever did before we thought of using those colorful bits of long- lived decoration. Lois and Nancy were talking about the vogue for the two and decided that it was not only the love for color but also the plainness of modern walls which made them so effective as decoration. When walls were paperd with a much figured paper there was little chance for the small bittersweet to make itself apparent. With the return of paper, and strongly figured paper, too, it is doubtful whether the bittersweet and the lanterns will n their popularity. 11 tell you what I wish, Lois. I do wish that women would throw out the dirty, dusty, dried up bittersweet and lanterns when they have served | their purpose. There is no point in | making them truly an everlasting deco- | ration, as some .women seem disposed | to do. | _“I like to use it during October and | November. It clashes in color with Christmas decorations, anyway, so I | throw mine out _then, And T throw it | | away. too, lest I be tempted to put it | back after New Year. It is gone. Then | I get ivy and use that for the rest of the winter. That change from vivid orange and vermilion to quiet rich green is pleasing. And ivy makes me think that after all Winter will pass away and Spring will come again.” If you have yourhome all dressed up for company and want to have a Halloween party, write to Nancy Page, care of this pa- per. inclosing a stamped self-addressed en- velope, asking for her leaflet on Halloween parties. (Copyright, 1929.) ‘To avert unemployment through the closing down of watch factories, Furt- wangen and Guetenback, in the famous Black Forest region of Germany, have guaranteed production costs to plants which will continue to operate. A REAL ENERGY-FOOD DDED HEAT With all the bran of the whole wheat Proteins and carbohydrates nicely balanced with the essential mineral salts and life-giving vitamins—crisp, eat it with milk or cream for any meal. 22, 1929, Paris—Thick, brown and warm is Regny makes a motor coat with double pack of the collar, Inner ones form a KEEPING ME BY JOSEPH Can You Outwit Your Nerves? As a duweller in Neurotica off and on for 14 years, I have been getting all the | help I can from books, as well as talis. | As to outwitting the merves, I question it as a possibility. I have been trying to do it to mine for, lo! these many years, | and for every time I have scored they have scored twice at least. If I had as little the matter with me as some of the cases descrived, I shouldn't have | much to outwit. But can it be done? | C. C. (Chronic Case). Reply. ‘The battle with nerves is a strategy, no doubt, and diplomacy counts: but whether you can gain a victory by strategy alone without a pitched battle I very much doubt. It's quite true that if you are all but ready to storm the defenses and take possession, that last step may be a sort of rue that quickens the capture and runs up the flag. But the flag didn’t win the battle. A friend of mine said it isn't a ques- tion of wits, but of courage, and that's| the reason why he does not believe in| psycho-analysis, which was what he| was talking about when he made the remark. His allment was one of the many that came on after war experi- | ences, and to all purposes he is well; has, indeed, never been incapacitated, but has a set of troublesome handicaps | which bother him, because his ideal is that of perfect health. He says that he has spent more useless thought in assuring himself of the groundlessness of his fears than are necessary to run his business, and the fact that the analyst found that he had a scare in childhood didn't help a bit. He is now resigned to the fact that he is going to carry that peculiar feeling of his for life. He is going to take it when it comes and carry on as though 1t1hl‘d no significance. He cannot out- wit it. A better phrase would be “dismissing your nerves.” The real difficulty with | BEAUTY CHATS Balanced Reduction Diet. If you have common sense about your | food you can reduce yourself by the really easy way, which is by eating fruit, | vegeiables and thin soups, salads and only a few forms of starchy foods. How- ever, If you really have sense about your food you'll probably never grow so stout that you have to reduce! However, some people cannot stand too much of an all-frult and green- vegetable diet. With some, this develops acidity. And it does not much matter, so far as losing weight goes, whether you eat fruit and vegetables in abun- dance or a lesser amount of meat, pota- toes and your usual sweets and pud- dings. You have only to keep the entire daily allowance of your food down to a caloric value of 1,200. You must re- duce on 1,200 calories a day; it is the scientific average. If you are tremen- dously heavy, you can go up to 1,500 a day, and gradually bring the amount down to 1,200. This amount is 1,000 calories less than a normal day’s allow- ance, and a lot less than the amount | you have been eating to put on weight. Have only black coffee and a thin square of toast for your breakfast. Eat the mildest lunch, mostly lettuce leaves, a roll or muffin. the teeniest amount of butter, coffee with hot milk, or tea with lemon, and, as & change, reducing mayonnaise on the lettuce or the small- est bit of roquefort cheese dressing. the diagonal tweed from which Jane revers. The outer revers fasteéh at the waistcoat. NTALLY FIT JASTROW. those of meurotic tendency is having their nerves on their sense, and any one who will develop a technique for that will be a savior of mankind. There's nothing easier to say than “Forget it.” and nothing harder to do. Freud sums it all up by saying that hystericals suffer from their memories; hey can't forget. When they outwit Lheir conscious memories the subcon- scious registers and keeps the sore alive. ‘That's how he would explain the case of fear-shock of the war just cited. To Freud neurosis is a case of imperfect forgetting. We state it popularly by saying that we just can’t get over it. The insult rankles; the disappointment just keeps on troubling. You are not reconciled to your fate, so your adjust- ment suffers as to your job or whatever you have in hand. You are distressed, distracted or unhappy because you can't forget. What you have to outwit is your memory, and when those memories are saturated with emotion the drowning of care is not the simple matter of out- witting that the books make out. It's a long struggle and a slow, hard fight. It's a matter of ups and downs at best. So in the end what all the writers and all the yeaders of these many books on nerve control are aiming at is “get- ting the better of your nerv not necessarily by your wits, for the intel- lectual part of the process is a small part of it, but by the combined exercise of your courage, your determination and the regulation of your life by a scheme which shall not be self-centered or health-centered. But—and it is so large a but that it deserves capital letters—that's a very different problem when you have inher- ited a set of nerves that kicks up the very devil on the least provocation or one that takes an emotional cyclone to disturb. All programs of nerve control not adjusted to the great range of indi- vidual differences are futile. Strength- ening our powers of resistance is a far better policy than outwitting nerves, BY EDNA KENT FORBES Then you may have a decent sort of | dinner, thin soup, 300 calories worth of lean meat or fish, a lot of lettuce and a large dish of green vegetables, a slice of bread and some butter and a very, very small amount of dessert. You may even have a glass of skim milk or buttermilk at bedtime, or a cup of weak tea with lemon and sugar and one small biscuit to eat with it. It will all total about 1,200 calorles. Reader—M. N.—Consult the doctor about the enlarged veins in your nose. Bow legs may be straightened or helped by wearing braces, if the bones have not hardened, as they would have after adult age. In any case, you should be adyvised by the doctor. X. Y. Z—Whiteheads show sluggish action of the skin, and everything you can do that stimulates the circulation under the skin will help toward ridding you of them. Dalily full warm baths, massage, salt baths occasionally and cold showers, when there is a good re- action will help. You cannpt clear your skin of white- heads very quickly, but it is best to im. prove the condition causing them through this general method of increas- ing the activity of the skin all over the body. No scars will follow while the skin throws off these hardened impacts. ks B One hundred and fifty fishing boats off Plymouth, Englamd, recently landed 1,500,000 fish in a single day. Taste alone can tell you how much better Wilkins Coffee is! Won’t you try a pound and let Your taste decide? minds in any| BRIDGE TALKS BY MRS. JOHN MUNCE. JR. In these talks I have tried to stay away from “don’ts” as far as possible, because I believe that too many “don'ts” are confusing; but there are two hold- ings which arise so often in actual play, that I think it is necessary to warn you against them. The' first of these is the five-trick hand, divided over four suits, and which is a beautiful hand for a one no trump bid. With a hand of this character, if your partner does not raise you, and there is an intervening bid; the hand does not warrant an increase from | one no trump to two no trump, but| should be used to double the intervening bid, insisiing that your partner name | his best_suit. So often does this situation arise, that I am going to illustrate with a typical hand, because it presents such a tempting picture, even to the most experienced piayer. Dealer bids one no trump, second hand bids two hearts, third and fourth hands pass, and deal- er, holding the following, doubles: Spades, Ace, Jack, 6. Hearts, Ace. 5 Diamonds. Kine. Quee Clubs, King, Queen, 7, This is undoubtedly s pretty hand, but dealer cannot bid two no trump. While his double calls for his partner's best suit, regardless of what his partner | may bid, this hand will be of wonderful | assistanoe. The second “don’t” hand, is the so- called four ace holding. That is a hand in which you hold the ace of each suit, without any other positive trick | in the hand. Immediately the ques- tion arises, this hand is worth 100 in honors, and to cash in that 100 in honors, many players are tempted to take chances that experience shows they have no possibility of winning. What has been said of the five-trick hand above, can be as well applied to this holding. The proper thing to do is to double the intervening bid by the opponent, for your partner's informa. tion, asking him to bid his best suit, and not to raise your own bid from one 1 to_two no trump. | The following hand held by dealer, on which he bids one no trump, illus- trates the four-ace holding: gpndes, Ace, Jack, 3. 5. 86 % 3 2 89, This is & hand containing what is| commonly called “100 aces,” or a hand | on which 100 could be scored in the | honor score if the declaration h!D-I pened to be no trump. Dealer in this| case bids one no trump, second hand passes, third passes, and fourth hand bids two spades. Looking at this hand carefully you can easily see how much better it would be to double this bid of two spades, which would be an informa- tory double, asking your partner to bid his best suit: than to go ahead and bid two no trump, and possibly be set. With any kind of hand, containing a| few high cards your partner, with this | strong hand for help is not likely to| go down, { . Never let the so-called “100 honors” in your hand influence you in the bid- ding when there is a possibiity of get- ting together with your partner and try- ing for game, or even a partial score. Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. ‘There are many, many pieces of fur- niture in our homes today which have double uses. The bookcase sometimes turns around and has a bed attached to the back. A mirror may have behind it a safety deposit box, and there is no guessing what one might find when an apparently plain screen is opened, for many times there are shelves on the back of this, to take care of dishes, | pans, etc. And now in one plece of furniture, as in the illustration, we find magazines, | smokes, and almost anything else one wants, 'if the space behind the little door is to be used for anything other than smoking materials, although it is ideal for that. ‘The magazine pockets at the sides make it a table which would delight the tired business man, for it is just right size to place at the side of any easy chair and hold the favorite books, magazines and newspapers. This stand may be finished in walnut, mahogany or enamel, and should be piaced at the right of the chair in order to allow room at the left for a bridge lamp just the right height for reading. (Copyright, 1929.) ‘To operate an automoblle in Germany one must pay nearly $50 for a license, and pass an examination and complete a course of instruction in a trafic school, licensed by the government, all of which requires several weeks. sosncasseananaen Driving, dining, dancing— does your powder stand the strain? WIND-BLOWN miles in an open car . . . the intimacy of a table for two . . . the warm crush of a crowded dance-floor. Are you fresh and dainty the whole eve- ning through? ou can be . .. with Armand Cold Cream Pc:_'- der—a modern powder for the active, modern miss. Light -ndfi:c&:h .:fi wery, very am amount of eold cresm it contains makes it last amazingly long. Rub it well 'into the puff before applying. It will blend better with your skin—and provide a positive insur- ance against thine! $1 at your dealer’s. Ask him also for ““Find Yourself,” a beauty book that reveals the real you. | ARMAND | time. A man of excellent character was FEATURES. The Sidewalks A young and newly-married profes- sional man recently established his own office. He was proud as he contemplat- | ed the equipment installed. A man | setting himself up in business for the first time gets a real “kick” out of it.| He throbs with a new importance nndi the world seems to be his oyster. Add | to this the acquisition of a wife, and most men's heads are in the clouds. Quite naturally, the young chap be- | thought himself about a secretary. He | sought a sensible girl who at the same | time would be an orament to the | office. He knew his psychological | onions. Out of a| - dozen worthy ap- plicants, he chose one who was no- body's “wash-out.” She exuded an air of efficiency, and | had a pair of big. blue orbs that spelled “finis” for | those susceptible | lads who might| fall under their charm. Elderly clients would be attracted by her personality. She would be an asset. The bride of a few months still desperately enamored of her husband, and suspect- | ed every girl of trying to vamp her | lord and master. This situation was | just too bad, and more so when the | wife laid eyes on the new secretary. ‘The morning the office was opened the young wife accompanied her hus- band. In the guise of one who wishes to help, she remained all day. Next day | she returned again. There wasn't enough work for two women and the | | new secretary began to resent the wife's | | presence. She suspected bride of jealousy. A week passed and the secretary en- tered her boss’ sanctum and com- | plained. “If Mrs. Biank persists in coming down to help,” she said, “you will have | to get another secretary.” There isn't enough work for two of us and either she or I will have to leave. It's up to you.” ‘There was determination in her man- ner and the employer was faced with an | alternative. At first he suggested that his wife remain home, but, just as he had anticipated, the young bride threw a fit of temper. She could see no rea- son why she should not be welcome at her husband’s office. She threatened to leave Washington d return to her parents’ home in a distant city. Of course, she didn't, but it was weeks before she accepted the situation with common sense and grace. * K ok x the young Desperate diseases require drastic treatments. Jealousy is sometimes | curable if the disease is attacked in suspected by his wife of being a Don Juan, She was a woman of lofty mind MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Apple Sauce with Bran. Baked Eggs on Toast. Bacon Curls. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Spinach with Poached Eggs. French Pried Potatoes. Raisin Bread. Orange Cream Pie. ‘Tea. DINNER. Broiled Beefsteak. Potatoes. Carrots and Peas. Lettuce. ‘Russian Dressing. Pineapple Tapioca. Bouillon. Coftee. EGGS ON TOAST. ‘Toast slices of bread cut a little over !; inche thick. But- ter them and trim to 3!; inch squares. Heap high on each the stiffly beaten white of an egg and carefully slip the unbroken yolk into a depression in the center. Put in a hot oven and cook very rapidly until the edges of the white are delicately browned and the yolk sufficiently set. Garnish with fresh parsley and serve im- mediately. ORANGE CREAM PIE. ‘Three eggs, 1 cup sugar, 2'% level tablespoonfuls cornstarch, grated rind of 2 oranges, juice of 1 qrange, 13; cups Sep- arate whites from yolks of eggs and beat yolks with half the sugar until light, mix corn- starch smooth with 3 cup of the milk and scald remainder in double boiler. When almost boil- ing stir in cornstarch and cook untfl thick. Add yolks of eggs, sugar, orange rind and juice. Cool slightly and pour into pre- viously baked crust. Beat whites of egg stiff, add remainder of sugar and flavor if liked with a little orange juice or grated rind. Pile on top of ple, put in & mod- erate oven to set and brown slightly. PINEAPPLE TAPIOCA. Soak 1 cup of tapioca over- night. In the morning put on stove in double boiler and when boiling hot add 1 cup of sugar and boil till clear. Add 1 small cup grated or chopped pineapple. Stir well and chill. Serve with whipped eream. Sallow, Dingy Skin made Lovely—Coarse Pores become Fine —It corrects oily shin, heals eruptions and dissolves blackheads. ‘The t discovery in beauty eculture is thi cremed magnesia is much better for the complexion than any soap or cleans- ing cream. It beautifies the in instantly, in the same easy way that milk of mi nesia purifies the stomach. This is because skin impurites are acld. Doctors treai acid the body with milk of maynesis. med magnesia Jour skin, with it o e an water. IUs as simple as washing your face. It reduces enlarged pores to the finest. gmoothest te if by magic: fine, that 308D 20 irritates and coars- ena. rease- 1t ot fatten can the 'face or grow hall o, maKeUS 3 St e your it L) w prove should cation, of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. and high purpose, but the germs of jealousy gnawed savagely within her. Her husband had reason to believe that she was going through his pockets in search of mcriminating evidence. Actually he had eyes for none save his wife. He dared not walk besid> & woman. To prove his suspicions, he de- cided to take a chance on creating a rumpus that might foraver end the wife’s suspicions. He asked a friend to “fake” a woman's handwriting and ad- dress a letter to him. In it were en- dearing terms and the suggestion of an appointment to meet at a certain trysting place. The letter was then in- serted in an inside coat pocket. One night he deliberately the coat on a chair in the b:droom while he went downstairs to fix the furnace. He remained n the cellar long enough, as he thought, for the wife to make a quick pass through his pockets. Of course, she discoversd the letter. She said nothing about it at the time, but several days later she inquired at the breakfast table who Birdi> was. Pre- tending to be embarrassed, h: mumbled something to the effect that he didn't know of any Birdie. “Oh, you two-faced creature,” ex- claimed “the irate wife. “You dare have the effrontery to sit there and deny you know a woman named Birdie. Why she is even writing you letters.” The husband cnuls suppress his mirth no longer and explained how he had had the letter writtsn to prove that she was examining his pockets. Naturally the wife refusad to believe as simply trying to evade the Another phone story. He was like all his sex. Eventually she accepted the truth, but not until the friend who had writ- ten the letter was produced and swore that he had participated in ths “frame- up.” The pockst pilfering ceased, and she is a happler woman for the ex- perience. EE One night we were backstage during the opening of a musical revue. The star was a famous woman and her name was in lights over the entrance. Before the first act was over a young fellow was receiving all the laughs and applause. 1In stag> parlance, he was “stealing the show.” No one had ever done that before in any show in which the star appeared. She was furious. At the conclusion of the performance she hastened to the producer and de- be cut, particularly the ones that got the laughs. ‘The producer was accustomed to such outbursts from 4 stars, and he knew, too, that a new star was in the ] ascendancy. He told the angry lady that he was in the busi- ness for com- mercial pu and not simply to exploit a temper- amental person. If she didn’t like it, she could leave the cast. She did. Just another example of that despicable monster, jealousy. Somehow I've allus been under the impression that a tornado worked fast, cleaned up an’ got out o' town s cizgus, but I read about the same one hangin’ around Floridy fer moren 10 day: Ionia, the little daughter o' Mrs. Leghorn _Tharp, president o' the Colonial Bridge Club, wuz seriously crushed today when a stack of un- washed dishes toppled over on her. Among the many things the average schoolboy can't git through his head is how his dad ever got where he 1s without knowin’ what an archipelago is. “I took a little spin in the country yisterday an’ I've never seen the bill- boards look purtier,” said Mrs. Gabe Craw today. (Copyright, 1929.) Franciscan Friars from North Wales made a special trip to Kentish hop flelds in England during the recent hop- picking season to care for children ;/)}:u parents were working in the elds. Cremed Maguesia clears the skin in the same easy way that milk It's impossible for Denton's Facial Magnesia not to im- com| fail to delight you, even after the very first your dealer is re- plexion. But, appli- quested to refund your money at once without question. IDENTON'S CREMED FacialMagnesia TE: Do mot hesitate teo try this marvelous ski Theusands of delighted woemen have written they ceuld mot beli anything so simple eould be oo wenderful. But they were whea they n-"“mhfim

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